According to a recent LinkedIn post from Interlace, the company is positioning its technology around payments for autonomous software agents rather than solely for human users. The post describes a scenario in which connected devices, such as smart refrigerators, independently compare prices, schedule deliveries, and execute virtual payments.
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The LinkedIn post highlights several technical themes that could shape future payment infrastructure, including identity verification for non-human agents, real-time on-chain settlement, and task-based micropayments instead of traditional subscriptions. For investors, this framing suggests Interlace is targeting an emerging “autonomous economy” segment, which may be early-stage but could provide long-term upside if agent-based commerce scales.
The emphasis on instant settlement and micro-budgeting implies potential alignment with blockchain and digital asset rails, areas attracting both venture interest and regulatory scrutiny. If Interlace can build defensible capabilities in agent-oriented KYC and payment orchestration, it could secure a niche within the broader fintech and AI-commerce ecosystem, though timing and market adoption remain key uncertainties.

